Original Factory Colors
Classic Ford Model A Paint Colors & Factory Codes (1930)
Every original factory paint color offered on the classic Ford Model A (1930), with official manufacturer paint codes, hex approximations, and rarity notes. Use the paint code to order a color-matched sample from a restoration supplier.
β Rare / Desirable Colors
β
Rare
Bronson Yellow
DuPont C8067
#caa23a
1929β1931
Bright yellow used 1929-31, mainly on commercial bodies and as a wheel/accent color; rare as a full body color.
Standard Colors
Andalusite Blue
DuPont G8592
#2f4858
1928β1930
Deep blue body color used on closed cars such as the Leatherback/Briggs Sedan (60B) for 1928-30.
Kewanee Green
DuPont DS118
#46583f
1929β1931
Green body color offered 1929-31 across several closed body styles.
Brewster Green
DuPont DS128
#27402c
1929β1931
Dark traditional Brewster Green used 1929-31, popular on Deluxe closed cars.
Elkpoint Green
DuPont DS127
#5a6347
1929β1931
Olive-toned green offered 1929-31.
Seal Brown
DuPont DS080
#3b2f28
1928β1930
Very dark brown body color 1928-30, frequently the lower-body color in two-tones.
Thorne Brown
DuPont L8815
#4a382b
1929β1931
Mid-brown used 1929-31; paired with black or Bramble Brown on Town Cars and closed bodies.
Moleskin Brown
DuPont DS079
#6b5d4a
1929β1930
Light gray-brown body color used 1929-30.
Chicle Drab
DuPont B8854
#8a8268
1930β1931
Tan/olive drab body color used 1930-31 across several closed styles.
Ford Maroon
DuPont DS056
#5a2730
1929β1930
Deep maroon used 1929-30 on Town Cars and Deluxe closed bodies; popular wheel and striping color.
Black
#111111
1928β1931
Standard fender color throughout production and an all-black option on many body styles, especially common in 1931.
About these colors:
Color names, factory paint codes, and production years are cross-referenced from established
marque references and owner registries. Hex codes are approximate digital representations of
factory paint β vintage automotive paint was never defined as a hex value, and original enamel
fades over time. True paint colors depend on age, sun exposure, refinishing history, and
production batch variation. For an accurate match, always mix by the factory paint code β not
by the on-screen swatch β and verify against an original paint chip or a professional
color-matched sample before purchasing paint for a restoration.